Bank of America Cut by Moody’s on Possible U.S. Aid (Update2)
March 25 (Bloomberg) -- Bank of America Corp., the biggest
U.S. lender, was downgraded by Moody’s Investors Service on
concern that the company may need a third round of financial aid
from the government.
Ratings on the bank’s senior debt were reduced to A2 from
A1, the senior subordinated debt fell to A3 from A2, and the
junior subordinated debt rating was cut to Baa3 from A2,
according to a statement today by Moody’s. The preferred stock
rating was downgraded to junk-level B3 from Baa1.
Bank of America “remains vulnerable to further declines”
in its ratio of tangible common equity to assets as borrowers
default, and the lender may be forced to ask the government for
more aid, suspend preferred stock dividends or “even offer a
distressed exchange to preferred shareholders,” Moody’s said.
The bank, which reported its first loss in 17 years in the
three months ended Dec. 31, has accepted capital and guarantees
from the Treasury valued at $163 billion, including aid to its
units. Chief Executive Officer Kenneth Lewis has said his
Charlotte, North Carolina-based bank will get through the credit
crunch without more help from taxpayers.
Lewis said in February the bank expects to boost its
tangible common equity ratio to 3 percent at the end of 2009 by
selling business units and reducing assets. The measure was 2.68
on Dec. 31.
‘Acute’ Pressures
Pressures on the firm’s capital “are made more acute
because U.S. banks’ access to the equity market is shut or very
limited at best,” which “increases the likelihood of a capital
initiative by the U.S. government,” the ratings firm said.
Bank of America stock has plunged by about two-thirds since
the lender raised $10 billion selling shares for $22 each in
October. The lender advanced 48 cents today to $7.70 at 4 p.m.
in New York Stock Exchange composite trading.
Earnings are “likely to be weak and, in light of Bank of
America’s sizable preferred dividend, could place significant
additional pressure upon the company’s already modest tangible
common equity position,” Moody’s Senior Vice President David
Fanger in the statement.
The Moody’s report echoes comments earlier in the day about
Wells Fargo & Co., which the ratings firm also downgraded on the
possible need more U.S. aid. Scott Silvestri, a Bank of America
spokesman, had no immediate comment today.
Bailout Package
The bank’s aid package was expanded in January after losses
from newly acquired Merrill Lynch & Co. spiraled beyond what
Lewis expected.
Lewis had said Bank of America expects revenue to top $100
billion this year with earnings “close to $50 billion” before
taxes and provisions. “That kind of cash flow can solve a lot
of problems, given time and an improving U.S. economy,” he said
during a speech in Boston this month.
Bank of America is cutting expenses after its acquisitions
of Countrywide Financial Corp., formerly the largest U.S. home
lender, and Merrill, the world’s largest securities brokerage.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Linda Shen in New York at
lshen21@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: March 25, 2009 16:02 EDT